Pre-verbal focus in Kisikongo (H16a, Bantu)

Autor/innen

  • Jasper De Kind

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21248/zaspil.57.2014.421

Abstract

The present paper aims at describing different pre-verbal focus strategies in Kisikongo (H16a), spoken in the vicinity of Mbanza Kongo, northern Angola. This western Bantu language is part of the Kikongo Language Cluster (KLC), stretching from southern Gabon to northern Angola, including Cabinda and parts of Congo-Brazzaville and Congo-Kinshasa. Kikongo exhibits a clause-internal pre-verbal argument focus position, which has rarely been reported in Bantu languages, except in Mbuun (B87) (Bostoen and Mundeke 2012) and Nsong (B85d) (Koni Muluwa and Bostoen, this volume), both spoken in the neighboring Kwilu region of the DRC. The more extensively studied eastern and southern Bantu languages generally have a post-verbal argument focus position (cf. Watters 1979, Morimoto 2000, Creissels 2004, Güldemann 2007, Buell 2009, van der Wal 2009, among others). In addition to this mono-clausal argument focus strategy, Kisikongo also relies on different bi-clausal constructions to focus arguments, i.e. cleft-constructions.

 

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Veröffentlicht

2014

Zitationsvorschlag

De Kind, Jasper. 2014. „Pre-Verbal Focus in Kisikongo (H16a, Bantu)“. ZAS Papers in Linguistics 57 (Januar):95-122. https://doi.org/10.21248/zaspil.57.2014.421.